Skip to content

mibusuio/onebusaway-android

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

OneBusAway for Android Build Status Join the OneBusAway chat

This is the official Android / Fire Phone app for OneBusAway!

Google Play logo

Amazon App Store logo

OneBusAway for Android provides:

  1. Real-time arrival/departure information for public transit
  2. A browse-able map of nearby stops
  3. A list of favorite bus stops
  4. Reminders to notify you when your bus is arriving
  5. The ability to search for nearby stops or routes
  6. Trip planning, including real-time updates (requires a regional OpenTripPlanner server)
  7. Issue reporting to any Open311-compliant issue management system (see this page for details)

OneBusAway for Android automatically keeps track of your most used stops and routes, and allows you to put shortcuts on your phone's home screen for any stop or route you choose.

Alpha and Beta Testing

Get early access to new OneBusAway Android versions, and help us squash bugs! See our Testing Guide for details.

Testing Your Own OneBusAway/OpenTripPlanner servers

Did you just set up your own OneBusAway and/or OpenTripPlanner server? You can test both in this app without compiling any Android code. Just download the app from Google Play, and see our Custom Server Setup Guide for details.

Build Setup

We use Gradle build flavors to enable a number of different build variants of OneBusAway Android.

We have two Gradle "platform" flavor dimensions:

  • google = Normal Google Play release
  • amazon = Amazon Fire Phone release

...and three Gradle "brand" flavor dimensions:

  • oba = Original OneBusAway brand
  • agencyX = A sample rebranded version of OneBusAway for a fictitious "Agency X"
  • agencyY = A sample rebranded version of OneBusAway for a fictitious "Agency Y"

This results in a total of 2 * 3 = 6 core build variants. Each of these core variants also has a debug/release build type - the end result is that you'll have 12 build variants to choose to build.

The below instructions assume you're going to be building for the google platform flavor and original oba brand by default (e.g., obaGoogleDebug), but also mention how you would build/run the amazon flavor for the oba brand (e.g., obaAmazonDebug). If you want more info about building the other brands, please see the Rebranding OneBusAway Android page.

Prerequisites for both Android Studio and Gradle

  1. Clone this repository
  2. Install Java Development Kit (JDK)

Building in Android Studio

  1. Download, install, and run the latest version of Android Studio.
  2. At the welcome screen select Import Project, browse to the location of this repository and select it then select Ok.
  3. Open the Android SDK Manager (Tools->Android->SDK Manager) and add a checkmark for the necessary API level (see compileSdkVersion in onebusaway-android/build.gradle) then select OK.
  4. Connect a debugging enabled Android device to your computer or setup an Android Virtual Device (Tools->Andorid->AVD Manager).
  5. Open the "Build Variants" window (it appears as a vertical button on left side of workspace by default) & choose obaGoogleDebug to select the Google Play version, or obaAmazonDebug to select the Fire Phone.
  6. Click the green play button (or Alt+Shift+F10) to build and run the project!

Building from the command line using Gradle

  1. Set the JAVA_HOME environmental variables to point to your JDK folder (e.g. C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.6.0_27)
  2. Download and install the Android SDK. Make sure to install the Google APIs for your API level (e.g. 17), the Android SDK Build-tools version for your buildToolsVersion version, the Android Support Repository and the Google Repository.
  3. Set the ANDROID_HOME environmental variable to your Android SDK location.
  4. To build and push the app to the device, run gradlew installObaGoogleDebug from the command line at the root of the project (or gradlew installObaAmazonDebug for Amazon build flavor)
  5. To start the app, run adb shell am start -n com.joulespersecond.seattlebusbot/org.onebusaway.android.ui.HomeActivity (alternately, you can manually start the app)

Release builds

To build a release build, you need to create a gradle.properties file that points to a secure.properties file, and a secure.properties file that points to your keystore and alias. The gradlew assembleGoogleRelease command will prompt for your keystore passphrase (for Amazon Fire Phone version, use gradlew assembleAmazonRelease).

The gradle.properties file is located in the onebusaway-android directory and has the contents:

secure.properties=<full_path_to_secure_properties_file>

The secure.properties file (in the location specified in gradle.properties) has the contents:

key.store=<full_path_to_keystore_file>
key.alias=<key_alias_name>

Note that the paths in these files always use the Unix path separator /, even on Windows. If you use the Windows path separator \ you will get the error No value has been specified for property 'signingConfig.keyAlias'.

Updating the Amazon Maps API library

Occasionally Amazon will likely release updates to their amazon-maps-api-v2 library. These artifacts aren't currently hosted on Maven Central or Jcenter. As a result, when they release an update, we need to update our bundled Maven repo with the new artifact. The steps to do this are:

  1. Download updated Amazon Maps API aar and pom files
  2. Download Apache Maven & unzip Apache Maven (installation not required)
  3. Run following command, replacing appropriate paths: path-to-bin-folder-of-maven/mvn install:install-file -Dfile=path-to-amazon-files/amazon-maps-api-v2.aar -DpomFile=path-to-amazon-files/amazon-maps-api-v2.pom -DlocalRepositoryPath=path-to-git-repo/.m2/repository

Contributing

We welcome contributions to the project! Please see our Contributing Guide for details, including Code Style Guidelines and Template.

Deploying OneBusAway Android in Your City

There are two ways to deploy OneBusAway Android in your city:

  1. Join the OneBusAway multi-region project - The easiest way to get started - simply set up your own OneBusAway server with your own transit data, and get added to the OneBusAway apps! See this page for details.
  2. Deploy a rebranded version of OneBusAway Android as your own app on Google Play - Requires a bit more maintenance, but it allows you to set up your own app on Google Play / Amazon App Store based on the OneBusAway Android source code. See rebranding page for details.

Permissions

In order to support certain features in OneBusAway, we need to request various permissions to access information on your device. See an explanation of why each permission is needed here.

Troubleshooting

When running the project, I get a NullPointerException in BaseMapFragment, related to mMap

You're most likely trying to run the obaAmazon build variant on an Google Android device, or the obaGoogle build flavor on an Amazon device.

Please be sure to select the correct build flavor for your device/emulator when running the project:

  • In Android Studio, you'll see a "Build Variant" button on the very left side of the screen, collapsed in the dock. Click on this, and select either obaGoogleDebug for Google devices, or obaAmazonDebug for Amazon devices:
  • From the command line, run gradlew installObaGoogleDebug for Google devices, or gradlew installObaAmazonDebug for Amazon devices.

OneBusAway Alexa User Interface flow

See the documentation at the top of the readme for more information on building via Android Studio or the command line.

When running the project I get prompted to install Amazon Maps. I already have Google Maps installed. What's going on?

This is likely due to running the obaAmazon build variant on an Google Android device. See the top troubleshooting question, and make sure you select the obaGoogleDebug build variant.

When running the project I get prompted to install Google Play Services. I have an Amazon Fire Phone that doesn't have Google Play Services. What's going on?

This is likely due to running the obaGoogle build variant on an Amazon Fire Phone. See the top troubleshooting question, and make sure you select the obaAmazonDebug build variant.

When importing to Android Studio, I get an error "You are using an old, unsupported version of Gradle..."

If you're using Android Studio v0.4.2 or lower, when importing, please be sure to select the settings.gradle file in the root, NOT the project directory. You will get the above error if you select the project directory / name of the project.

I get build errors for the Android Support libraries or Google APIs

Open the Android SDK Manager and make sure the following are installed:

  • Under Tools
    • Android SDK Tools
    • Android SDK Platform-tools
    • Android SDK Build-tools
  • Under the currently used SDK version (see compileSdkVersion in onebusaway-android/build.gradle)
    • SDK Platform
    • Google APIs
  • Extras
    • Android Support Repository
    • Android Support Library
    • Google Play services
    • Google Repository

Android Studio or Gradle can't find my Android SDK, or the API Levels that I have installed

Make sure that you're consistently using the same Android SDK throughout Android Studio and your environmental variables. Android Studio comes bundled with an Android SDK, and can get confused if you're pointing to this SDK within Android Studio but have your environmental variables pointed elsewhere. Click "File->Project Structure", and then under "Android SDK" make sure you "Android SDK Location" is the correct location of your Android SDK.

Also, make sure you've set the ANDROID_HOME environmental variable to your Android SDK location and the JAVA_HOME environmental variables to point to your JDK folder.

OneBusAway Project

Want to learn more about the OneBusAway project? Read up on the entire Application Suite and/or learn more about the mobile apps.

About

The official Android/Fire Phone app for OneBusAway

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 99.8%
  • Other 0.2%